Mint founder and CEO Aaron Patzer declined to disclose Mint's
valuation, but says, "it is a decidedly up round."

He adds: Mint.com is the leading online personal finance tool,
now with 1.4m registered users. Mint is tracking over $175
billion in transactions, $47 billion in assets and has identified
$300 million in potential savings for its users. Revenues
are undisclosed, but are up 8x year over year.

Now that we have a sampling of about 2% of online US households,
we’ve also been seeing some interesting economic trends.
This data, particularly at the merchant level, has attracted
considerable press interest as of late.

The idea is that this could be a good buy someday for a portal
like Yahoo (YHOO) or AOL (TWX), or even a big bank.

For instance, we've heard that Yahoo has recently been sniffing
around at Mint's competitor, Wesabe. The company admits it has
"had some interest from various companies," but is "focused on
building the business."

Earlier this year, we calculated that Mint could reach $10
million in sales this year if it hits its 2009 growth targets.
Mint's expenses include servers, engineers, and paying banks
about $7 or $8 per year, per user, for access to your accounts.

Previously, the company has raised more than $17 million in
financing from Benchmark Capital, Shasta Ventures, First Round
Capital, and angel investors.

Mint received 1.04 million U.S. unique visitors in July,
according to Compete, about flat since January.